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First of five volumes employing dozens of scholars from around the world to provide the definitive history of the most important event in Catholic history in the 20th century.
The second of five volumes focuses on the issues and developments at the beginning of the Second Vatican Council.
This third volume of five focuses on the second session to show the Council became one of the major events in 20th century Church history.
This fourth volume of the acclaimed series reconstructs the work of the Council during the third session, which was to produce two of the most significant texts of Vatican II: the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, and the Decree on Ecumenism.
The final volume of the definitive history of the Second Vatican Council.
This second volume of Professor Moffett's acclaimed History of Christianity in Asia illustrates the advance of the modern missionary movement in the continent of its birth.
The first of a two-volume history documenting the spread of Christianity to southern Asia, India, and China.
A comprehensive summary of the rewards and challenges of doing mission as Maryknoll begins its second hundred years in a greatly changed world.
The second volume in the most comprehensive history of global Christianity.
Renowned scholars examine social, political, and cultural transformations of the past half century in theological context.
The first volume in a comprehensive history of the spread of Christianity including the non-Western world, from its beginnings to 1453.
This companion to History of the World Christian Movement explores how varied and multi-cultural Christian origins and history really are.
A Jesuit community's conversion to the poor, and the price they paid.
A compelling spiritual biography of Julian of Norwich, the English mystic whose Revelations are the first work of Christian theology in English.
Inspirational profiles of white Americans who fought against racial injustice at great risk.
In this 20th anniversary edition of a classic, James H. Cone cuts through superficial assessments of King and Malcolm as polar opposites to reveal two men whose visions were complementary and moving toward convergence.